public interface DirObjectFactory extends ObjectFactory
The JNDI framework allows for object implementations to
be loaded in dynamically via object factories. See
ObjectFactory
for details.
A DirObjectFactory
extends ObjectFactory
by allowing
an Attributes
instance
to be supplied to the getObjectInstance()
method.
DirObjectFactory
implementations are intended to be used by DirContext
service providers. The service provider, in addition reading an
object from the directory, might already have attributes that
are useful for the object factory to check to see whether the
factory is supposed to process the object. For instance, an LDAP-style
service provider might have read the "objectclass" of the object.
A CORBA object factory might be interested only in LDAP entries
with "objectclass=corbaObject". By using the attributes supplied by
the LDAP service provider, the CORBA object factory can quickly
eliminate objects that it need not worry about, and non-CORBA object
factories can quickly eliminate CORBA-related LDAP entries.
NamingManager.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable<?, ?>)
,
DirectoryManager.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable<?, ?>, javax.naming.directory.Attributes)
,
ObjectFactory
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
Object |
getObjectInstance(Object obj,
Name name,
Context nameCtx,
Hashtable<?,?> environment,
Attributes attrs)
Creates an object using the location or reference information, and attributes
specified.
|
getObjectInstance
Object getObjectInstance(Object obj, Name name, Context nameCtx, Hashtable<?,?> environment, Attributes attrs) throws Exception
Special requirements of this object are supplied
using environment
.
An example of such an environment property is user identity
information.
DirectoryManager.getObjectInstance()
successively loads in object factories. If it encounters a DirObjectFactory
,
it will invoke DirObjectFactory.getObjectInstance()
;
otherwise, it invokes
ObjectFactory.getObjectInstance()
. It does this until a factory
produces a non-null answer.
When an exception
is thrown by an object factory, the exception is passed on to the caller
of DirectoryManager.getObjectInstance()
. The search for other factories
that may produce a non-null answer is halted.
An object factory should only throw an exception if it is sure that
it is the only intended factory and that no other object factories
should be tried.
If this factory cannot create an object using the arguments supplied,
it should return null.
Since DirObjectFactory
extends ObjectFactory
, it
effectively
has two getObjectInstance()
methods, where one differs from the other by
the attributes argument. Given a factory that implements DirObjectFactory
,
DirectoryManager.getObjectInstance()
will only
use the method that accepts the attributes argument, while
NamingManager.getObjectInstance()
will only use the one that does not accept
the attributes argument.
See ObjectFactory
for a description URL context factories and other
properties of object factories that apply equally to DirObjectFactory
.
The name
, attrs
, and environment
parameters
are owned by the caller.
The implementation will not modify these objects or keep references
to them, although it may keep references to clones or copies.
obj
- The possibly null object containing location or reference
information that can be used in creating an object.name
- The name of this object relative to nameCtx
,
or null if no name is specified.nameCtx
- The context relative to which the name
parameter is specified, or null if name
is
relative to the default initial context.environment
- The possibly null environment that is used in
creating the object.attrs
- The possibly null attributes containing some of obj
's
attributes. attrs
might not necessarily have all of obj
's
attributes. If the object factory requires more attributes, it needs
to get it, either using obj
, or name
and nameCtx
.
The factory must not modify attrs.Exception
- If this object factory encountered an exception
while attempting to create an object, and no other object factories are
to be tried.DirectoryManager.getObjectInstance(java.lang.Object, javax.naming.Name, javax.naming.Context, java.util.Hashtable<?, ?>, javax.naming.directory.Attributes)
,
NamingManager.getURLContext(java.lang.String, java.util.Hashtable<?, ?>)
Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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DRAFT 9-internal+0-2016-01-26-133437.ivan.openjdk9onspinwait